Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
19 April 2018
Social
Media – Addiction or Passion?
[When
the Sri Lankan Government took action to impose the curfew, banning the social
media and declaring the State of Emergency to control the Sinhala-Muslim unrest
in the Kandy District in March, there were undue pressures from certain
diplomats on the Government, President Maithripala Sirisena said on Tuesday in
London.
“Certain diplomats
spoke against the Government moves to take necessary action-including banning
access to social media sites. Some of the diplomats acted beyond their mandate
against the move,” the President told a group of Sri Lanka community in London
Tuesday night.
“But despite those
oppositions, the Government had taken necessary action, and because of that we
able to prevent a major tragedy,” he said.
The
President also said that at that time, an organization connected to the UN had
stated that Sri Lanka had managed to impose a complete ban on the social media
sites-something even the US couldn’t do.] – Daily Mirror
article - Social media ban: Undue pressure from diplomats: President
A
Sri Lankan comparing her/himself with an American and taking credit is acting
in breach of the laws of Equality which prohibit direct relationships between
sovereign bodies. This habitual breach of crossing cultural borders is the root
reason for Sri Lanka’s ethnic problems.
It
was the same social media that influenced Starbucks Café to take internal
action to address the problem reported as follows by SBS news:
[Starbucks announced Tuesday that it
would close all company-owned stores and corporate offices in the United States
on May 29 to conduct "racial-bias education," following outrage over
the arrest of two black men in one of its cafes.
It was the latest
move by the CEO of Starbucks to recover from damage to the mammoth chain's
reputation by the incident, captured on video and posted last Thursday on
Twitter, which has been viewed millions of times and drawn widespread
condemnation.
The curriculum will be designed "to address implicit
bias, promote conscious inclusion, prevent discrimination and ensure everyone
inside a Starbucks store feels safe and welcome," the company said in a
statement.
Starbucks boss apologises after arrests of black men
spark accusations of racial profiling
Starbucks said more than 8,000 stores would
be closed and training provided to nearly 175,000 employees and incorporated
into company training going forward.
"While this is not limited to Starbucks,
we're committed to being a part of the solution," said Starbucks CEO Kevin
Johnson, who earlier apologized for the incident.
"Closing our stores for racial bias
training is just one step in a journey that requires dedication from every
level of our company and partnerships in our local communities."
The video posted by a Starbucks client
shows uniformed police questioning and then handcuffing the two men, who offer
no resistance, as a white client repeatedly asks an officer, "What'd they
do? What'd they do?"
Philadelphia police said they received a
911 call from a Starbucks worker who said the men were trespassing, after
sitting down and refusing to buy anything. Police said officers had
"politely" asked the two to leave before finally arresting them.]
The Sri
Lankan Government’s action was top-down and may suit Sri Lanka, where there are
no special laws to confirm the existence of racial discrimination. In America,
this law helps people have ‘reasoning’ on the basis of race as well, when someone
of a different cultural group feels victimized. The parallel of such a law for
majority Sri Lankans is Buddhism foremost article in the Constitution – so majority
Sri Lankans would ‘understand’ each other through Buddhist values. But this
requires for Buddhists to stay within their cultural boundaries and not
infiltrate into another culture under the pretext of secularism. When attacking
Tamil militants, a Buddhist Sri Lankan soldier who was/is outside the
boundaries of rule of law, stands unprotected by Common Belief. Likewise a Muslim. Given that the average Sri
Lankan operates at cost-benefit level rather than policy level – they need
rules through which they can measure each other and correct each other
including through social media where the citizen is ‘free’ of pressure from
unpractised rules that the formal media are bound by and more importantly are
free of the bias that the formal media demonstrate when they think they are not
accountable but that others are accountable to them.
In his Easter
message, the Pope is reported to have shared the following message:
[The Pope recalled that the apostles had been forbidden to preach,
to announce Jesus and yet, after their release from prison by an angel, they
return to teach in the temple. As narrated in the First Reading today taken
from Acts (Acts 5: 27-33), they are brought before the Sanhedrin where the high
priest reminds them they were forbidden from teaching in the name of Jesus.
"We must obey God instead of men" : is Peter's answer. The word
"obedience" returns, then, also in today's Gospel (Jn 3: 31-36). And
the Pope underlined it because "a life of obedience" is what
characterizes the apostles who received the Holy Spirit. Obedience to follow
the path of Jesus who "obeyed to the end" as in the Garden of Olives.
Obedience consists in doing the will of God. Obedience is the path that the Son
"has opened to us", says Francis, and the Christian therefore
"obeys God".] Asianews.it article - Pope: today there are Christians
'in prison, slaughtered and hanged because they proclaim Jesus'
The
media ban by the Government of Sri Lanka is an example of requiring obedience
to man. Obedience to God who has no particular physical form Common to all – is
Obedience to Law. Like in the case of religions – a law would be given form by
each cultural group as per their respective beliefs. Hence in the same country,
one law would legitimately be interpreted in different forms by diverse
cultural groups who carry distinct cultural identity. The interpretation of the
victim is the appropriate form where it is different to that of an authority
who shows no lawful reason for punishing the victim – as was the case in the
Starbucks Café arrests.
If
the arresting officers were Christians and America had ‘Christianity foremost’
article in its constitution they would not have been obedient to the
receptionist who called them to the scene. They would have obeyed God / the law
The
social ban happened due to there being pathway open to minorities to be heard
first when especially when they are victims. While emotions could be kindled
through social media those who value ‘freedom’ of speech that comes from
obedience to God/Law, would cure each other through social sharing. Otherwise
we would need more and more ‘irreconcilable items’ that would continuously keep
separating us due to lack of trust in each other. This is what the President
has confirmed by taking credit for media ban.
In
the kingdom of God – we are all sovereign entities and therefore would protect
our sovereignty as individuals. One who obeys God/the law that leads to Truth –
is independent of man – any man or group with particular form.
No comments:
Post a Comment